“…Lanthipeptides form a promising source of stable bioactive compounds with a broad range of biological activities ranging from antimicrobial (lantibiotics), antifungal, or antiviral activities to signaling molecules, channel regulators, and immunomodulatory, antiallodynic, anticonceptive, or anticancer activities. ,, Current genome mining methodologies , have shown that they are produced by species of all domains of life, with a broad and versatile range of topologies and diverse biosynthetic types of machinery. , The extraordinary diversity of modification enzymes and structures of the family of RiPPs provides an attractive synthetic biology platform for combining different modules of enzymes to introduce a variety of post-translational modifications in peptides. − For example, it opens up the possibility of synthesizing engineered novel macrocyclic NRPS-like structures without requiring multimodular enzyme complexes for their synthesis. , Different biosynthetic machinery have been used to produce lanthipeptides with new structures and biological functions, such as the production of antimicrobials, hormones, protein inhibitors against HIV, and epitope grafting. − Moreover, the expression of hybrid peptides with different leaders from RiPP machinery and the development of peptides with enhanced activity and/or stability by the introduction of lanthionine ring(s) have been demonstrated. ,− However, some of the modification enzymes used in previous studies display a moderate-to-high substrate specificity, thereby limiting their potential for the modification of unrelated precursor peptides. To overcome this limitation, a new group of lanthipeptide synthetases called ProcM-like enzymes is currently under investigation because of their high substrate promiscuity.…”